Great idea! I just read about that feature a minute ago and it didn't
even occur to me that that might be the solution to my problem. Are there
any recommended characters that won't be interpreted by sed or bash?
'#' will be interpreted as a comment in my
bash script, correct?
On Wed, 29 Oct 2003, Bryan Richter wrote:
>
> On Wed, Oct 29, 2003 at 08:06:38PM -0800, David Margolis wrote:
> > How do I do: 'sed s/$i\\/$i/$i/g' when $i might have it's own forward
> > slashes?
>
> The / character is arbitrary in sed expressions. Maybe try using
> 'sed s#$i\\/$i#$i#g' ?
>
> -Bryan R
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